You have not been recognized as a subscriber to Enviromental History online. About 182 words from this article are provided below; about 510 words remain.
 
If you are a individual subscriber to Environmental History, you may:
• login here if you have already registered for online access.
• Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.
• Set up your online account for the first time.

If you are not a subscriber to the Environmental History, you can:
•  get subscription information here.
• Purchase a research pass to gain two hour access to the entire History Cooperative web site. You will have full access to current issues of Environmental History (8.1-present).

Instititutions can:
• get subscription information here to receive print and electronic issues.
• 
Activate your existing subscription so that we recognize your IP number ranges.
| Book Review | Environmental History, 13.1 | The History Cooperative
13.1  
Journals link Search link Partners link Information link
January, 2008
Previous
Next
Environmental History

Table of Contents
List journal issues
Home
Get a printer-friendly version of this page
 

Book Review


Unlikely Environmentalists: Congress and Clean Water, 1945–1972. By Paul Charles Milazzo. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2006. xii + 340 pp. Illustrations, notes, bibliography, and index. Cloth $29.95.

While most accounts take it for granted that the mass environmental movement of the late 1960s drove the creation of the modern American environmental state, Paul Milazzo's superb new study insists that several disparate streams—often uncharted by historians—fed into the river of modern environmental policy making. These streams included the postwar celebration of economic growth (dirty water threatened production), traditional distributive politics (grants for waste treatment plants were the pork that eased passage of the first postwar anti-pollution water laws), and the vogue for "systems analysis," which grew out of the military industrial complex but inspired a holistic ecological approach to pollution that greatly enhanced regulatory ambitions. Thus some of the least likely actors, including the Army Corps of Engineers and Senator Robert Kerr (R-OK), founder of the Kerr-McGee Oil Company, were the Unlikely Environmentalists who more than environmental interest groups erected the system that still keeps America's water (reasonably) clean. . . .

There are about 510 more words in this article. Please log in (or, if you are not yet an authorized user, please go to the User Setup page) to gain full access rights. Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.